Nikkei Sushi Bar
Nikkei Sushi Bar is a relaxed fusion spot in Aruba where Japanese technique meets bold Peruvian flavor. From classic rolls to creative specials, everything is made fresh served in-house, for pickup, or delivered across the island. They came to us for a website that made it easy for people to discover the menu and order fast.
Client
Nikkei Sushi Bar
Service Provided
Web Design, Web Development
The Goal:
Nikkei wanted a site that felt as modern and fresh as their food. The first impression should be clear: this is not a generic sushi place. It’s fusion: Japanese roots, Peruvian personality, and ingredients that are carefully prepared every day. Our main goals were to: Quickly explain what “Nikkei” means in simple, friendly language. Highlight fan-favorite dishes and show how to get them, whether you’re dining in or ordering at home. Give new visitors a sense of the story behind the restaurant and why locals keep coming back. We wanted people to land on the site, feel hungry, and know exactly where to click next.
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The Challenge:
Nikkei’s menu is big: sushi rolls, ramen, tiraditos, veggie options, and more. On top of that, they offer dine-in, pickup, and delivery. The challenges were: Keeping the website from feeling like an overcrowded menu board. Talking about their made-from-scratch approach and local sourcing without turning it into an essay. Showing that it’s both a “special night out” spot and a go-to for a quick, reliable takeout order. We had to balance personality and clarity: enough detail to build trust, but not so much that people get stuck reading instead of ordering.
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The Result
The finished website puts Nikkei’s fusion story and food front and center. A clean hero section introduces the concept and gives you direct options: explore the menu or start an order. Key dishes and categories are highlighted visually so people can quickly spot what they’re in the mood for. An About section tells their story in a down-to-earth way, how they started, what “Nikkei” means to them, and why freshness matters paired with photos of the team and the space so it feels real, not generic. For the restaurant, the site is a central place to send traffic from social media and delivery platforms. For customers, it’s an easy way to decide: “Are we going out tonight, or are we bringing Nikkei home?”
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